Abstract

Projects for the Reorganization of the Rural Habitat designed by Le Corbusier during the ‘30s posed a territorial model from a radically new vision. The Ferme Radieuse, the Village Radieux and its implementation as the Unité d’Explotation Agricole within his theory of Les Trois Établissements Humains, form a complex theory of agricultural land use with an innovative character. However, in these studies some historical and vernacular references can also be found. They significantly influenced the overall approach and the results. Thanks to his relationship with the rural activist Norbert Bézard and a direct contact with farmers in the region of Sarthe, in central France, Le Corbusier began to understand their problems, needs and ways of working. He approached, at the same time, to some theoretical reflections from French rural historians and geographers, such as Roupnel and Ramuz. Influence from writers like Ritter or politicians like Giradoux, together with its own interests, marked his later designs. Besides the accepted functionalist scheme, we can also find in this Reorganization of the Rural Habitat some interesting historical connections as well as a nostalgic attempt to recover past and vernacular models.

Highlights

  • Land management projects by Le Corbusier during the ‘30s rose as a radically new model

  • Radiant farm and village emerged as solutions to the problem of an isolated rural society

  • Industrial progress had caused a tremendous disconnection between urban and rural, which were in different worlds

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Summary

Introduction

Land management projects by Le Corbusier during the ‘30s rose as a radically new model. The Ferme Radieuse, the Village Radieux and subsequent implementation of both as the Unité d’Explotation Agricole within his theory of Les Trois Établissements Humains (Le Corbusier 1945, 1959, 1981), can be understood as a real proposal to reorganize the rural habitat The focus of this “Agrarian Urbanism” projects was essentially functionalist. This article aims to go beyond previous works (see García-Germán 2008; McLeod 2004; Ragot 2013), understanding that Le Corbusier’s projects included a complex analysis of the situation of the agricultural world and the territorial development. They directly connected functionality, cultural and landscape values, in order to relate them with contemporary life. The approach has been done through the study of the original plans, published by the author himself, along with documentation from its foundation, revisions and new editions of these works

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